Literature DB >> 11212183

The organized categories of infant, child, and adult attachment: flexible vs. inflexible attention under attachment-related stress.

M Main1.   

Abstract

From an evolutionary perspective, a central mechanism promoting infant survival is the maintenance of proximity to attachment figures. Consequently attachment figure(s) represent the infant's primary solution to experiences of fear. Aspects of the development of the field of attachment are outlined within this context, beginning with Bowlby's ethological/evolutionary theory, and proceeding to Ainsworth's early descriptions of infant-mother interaction in Uganda and Baltimore. Using a laboratory procedure called the strange situation, Ainsworth identified three organized patterns of infant response to separation from and reunion with the parent. Narratives derived from videotaped strange situation behavior of infants in each category (secure, avoidant, and resistant/ambivalent) are provided, together with a discussion of the prototypical sequelae of each category (e.g., school behavior, and separation-related narratives and drawings at age six). The Adult Attachment Interview (AAI) and the move to the level of representation are also described. AAI transcripts are presently analyzed according to the speaker's capacity to adhere to Grice's maxims of rational cooperative discourse, and three organized AAI categories, or states of mind with respect to attachment, have been identified (secure-autonomous, dismissing, and preoccupied). When the interview is administered to parents who have been seen with their infants in the strange situation, each AAI category has repeatedly been found to predict that infant's strange situation response to that parent. Illustrations of the discourse characteristic of each category are provided, and it is noted that individuals with apparently unfavorable life histories are found to have secure offspring, providing that their history is recounted coherently. Like infant strange situation behavior, differences in adult security as identified through discourse patterning are interpreted in terms of attentional flexibility or inflexibility under attachment-related stress.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 11212183     DOI: 10.1177/00030651000480041801

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Psychoanal Assoc        ISSN: 0003-0651


  28 in total

1.  A secure base in adolescence: markers of attachment security in the mother-adolescent relationship.

Authors:  Joseph P Allen; Kathleen Boykin McElhaney; Deborah J Land; Gabriel P Kuperminc; Cynthia W Moore; Heather O'Beirne-Kelly; Sarah Liebman Kilmer
Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  2003 Jan-Feb

2.  Dismissing children's perceptions of their emotional experience and parental care: preliminary evidence of positive bias.

Authors:  Jessica L Borelli; Daryn H David; Michael J Crowley; Jonathan E Snavely; Linda C Mayes
Journal:  Child Psychiatry Hum Dev       Date:  2013-02

3.  Caregiving antecedents of secure base script knowledge: a comparative analysis of young adult attachment representations.

Authors:  Ryan D Steele; Theodore E A Waters; Kelly K Bost; Brian E Vaughn; Warren Truitt; Harriet S Waters; Cathryn Booth-LaForce; Glenn I Roisman
Journal:  Dev Psychol       Date:  2014-09-29

4.  Relations Between Narrative Coherence, Identity, and Psychological Well-Being in Emerging Adulthood.

Authors:  Theodore E A Waters; Robyn Fivush
Journal:  J Pers       Date:  2014-09-23

Review 5.  Enhancing family resilience through family narrative co-construction.

Authors:  William R Saltzman; Robert S Pynoos; Patricia Lester; Christopher M Layne; William R Beardslee
Journal:  Clin Child Fam Psychol Rev       Date:  2013-09

6.  Adult attachment representations and the quality of romantic and parent-child relationships: An examination of the contributions of coherence of discourse and secure base script knowledge.

Authors:  Theodore E A Waters; K Lee Raby; Sarah K Ruiz; Jodi Martin; Glenn I Roisman
Journal:  Dev Psychol       Date:  2018-10-15

7.  A Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count Analysis of the Adult Attachment Interview in Two Large Corpora.

Authors:  Theodore E A Waters; Ryan D Steele; Glenn I Roisman; Katherine C Haydon; Cathryn Booth-LaForce
Journal:  Can J Behav Sci       Date:  2016-01-01

8.  Caregiver traumatization adversely impacts young children's mental representations on the MacArthur Story Stem Battery.

Authors:  Daniel S Schechter; Annette Zygmunt; Susan W Coates; Mark Davies; Kimberly Trabka; Jaime McCaw; Ann Kolodji; Joann Robinson
Journal:  Attach Hum Dev       Date:  2007-09

9.  Association between the serotonin transporter promoter polymorphism (5-HTTLPR) and adult unresolved attachment.

Authors:  Kristin M Caspers; Sergio Paradiso; Rebecca Yucuis; Beth Troutman; Stephan Arndt; Robert Philibert
Journal:  Dev Psychol       Date:  2009-01

10.  A LONGITUDINAL EXAMINATION OF TODDLERS' BEHAVIORAL CUES AS A FUNCTION OF SUBSTANCE-ABUSING MOTHERS' DISENGAGEMENT.

Authors:  Hannah F Rasmussen; Jessica L Borelli; Cindy Decoste; Nancy E Suchman
Journal:  Infant Ment Health J       Date:  2016-03-03
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